Newspapers / The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, … / Aug. 10, 1905, edition 1 / Page 1
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advsbtisistg BUSiNtSS , , vT STEAM IS TO Machinery, IF YOU ARE A HUSTLER TOO Will ADVERTISE YOOB Business, IT TT Ml MMONWEAE H K E. E.HILLIARD, Editor and Proprietor. "EXCELSIOR" IS OUR MOTTO. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE $x.oo. VOL. XXI. New Series-Vol. 7. (7-1 8) SCOTLAND NECK, N. O, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1(5, 1905. NO 33 piO telling Power Sehi font Advertjshuekt ik rev. T Co 8 1 r 4 s l'iiin i trv encap luugu ineui- Get the best, Ayer's cine? rry Pectoral. What a A it has. sixty years of herry ectoral t! Ask your doctor if doesn't use it for coughs, COtvi?, iMuiiwuiiiS) auu an f throat and lung troubles. .. j ; .v f-'.itn! that Ayer's Cherry Pectoral a . . . , , ,t 7::t :;eim I can prescribe for lron- i '. , . ,''::. ;;7;i. :ihs. anl harri folds." y" M. LOiJiXAX, MJ)., Ithaca. N. Y- T. C. ATER CO., for Bronchitis Cermet any tendency 10 consupa ion vvith small doses of Aver's Pills. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hair. Proniwr. luxuriant trrowth. Kever Fails to Best ore Gray H:ii? to its Youthful Color. Cure oa!p dirasa & hair ialling. i . aJ I.Wat lrujjista PROFESSIONAL. J. P. WIMBERL,Ex, OFFICE HLIICK HOTEL, SCOTLAND NECK. N. C. if A. A ALBION DUNN, s , ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Scotland Neck, N. C. I'i ict'ee wherever their services are ie'H:ired. H. W. 3IIX0X, Kn k : rise. Oftici an, Wm-i-m-Maker. Jewelek, Engraver, Scotia u.d Neck, N. C. 0! A. O. LIVERMON, Dentist. -K-Over New Whithead Building "i j h , frorsi !) to 1 c'eloek- ; -2 tc V!'ck, p. m. -r, TLAXD NECK, N. C. E WARD L. TRAVIb, ?ry una Counselor at Law, HALIFAX, N. C- rT'tf-j i -; Loaned oh farm Lands. Grim Grasp Caused Keart Disease. Could Not Lie Left Side. On Dr.MUes'Heart Cure and Nervine Cured Me. H. P.. T. -e. formerly of Birmingham, A:.i.. v.r.tcs lium EWreJgt, the same state, v : l .ilo'.V: "It :: with the rrreotef-t pleasure that I rec cunrr.end I Jr. Miles' N-rvine and Heart Lvt. i oi.?7 wi.h that I could tell every f .t:t:er h -v inucn good they have cone rue. i a.-t v:;cr i had a severe attack of La-'-...c, i: i, kit my heart in a very bad c r.a.:i. :.. 1 t.a.d not lie down for the i-:v,i.:'-:as spells that trould almost over came and the feeling of oppression s: ::-y heart. I had not been SO that I c i i; on my left side for a lonjj time. I E .t v ,.ur Heart Cure aad took three bottles. I n troubb now v.:th my heart and fJM ( .;.,! r y leit si-ie as well as my right. 1 rr. , I ha,-; suffered for years with nerv-(- : ' tr.-.tii ;n. I hr.d tried m many rern- ' it 1 had pot char out o! heart of ptt anything that would help me. The r.cr.es d my heait were so affected that J' rr.ctiincs it would lose bea!s so it would -.rr: to strip skot-chor. It was on the ad- : of a huly frie:7d that I tried your Restor : ve Nervine. 1 felt better after the first o.--3 and two bottles of Nervine and - ' t llvar- Cure made me feel like a new r"-r:-,n. Mv he.-rt is all right and my nery ;;: -isaii pjae. I never fail to recom-i'- -!. ! it to others aiTlicted as I was." Ail ilri'jrists sell and jT.iarafitce first bot ti: i r. Miiti Keni-.-dies. Send tor free book m N.-.-rvous and Heart lieases. Addres Lr. Miics Medical Co, Eikhiirt, lad. IT OP Li v edr y ii ggies Harness W h i p s" 11 o b e s Tartisvo it is a pleasure to take Dr. Dade's i -ii'tt Liver Pills aurl eujoy their tonic e feet ist.ori thfi Hvfir. Sold bv E. T V.'hitPhead & Co., Scotland Neck, and g-U'. drugstore, Hobgood. mm??? Unri DITOF'S. JEISURE jOUFS, OBSERVATIONS OF What we shall say in this column now will relate to observations made last week on the occasion ol the Semi-centennial Celebration of Harnett Observations in a Dry County. sale of intoxicating liquors. We are not quite sure how long prohibition has prevailed in Harnett, but we are sure that it Has prevailed long enough to be effective. It is a common saying with persons who do not favor pro hibition and who give their influence to the liquor traffic, that prohibition does not prohibit. The great day at Lillington last Thursday ought to settle that question forever with the people of Harnett county and all others who made observation of the day. There were at least five thousand people present, and perhaps more, and in this number were people from all parts of the county, representing about every phase of life in the county ; and it was stated that there was u n drunkeu man on the ground. That state ment, however, would hem ;t little modification ; for while .there was no "drunk-and-dowu" case, we aiw two persons late in the day who were somewhat under the influence of iut -xicants, but they were not boisterous or troublesome. Two meu who are natives of Harnett, one still a resident of the county and the other not, at the close of the day sat and talked over old times and school boy experieuces and observations made in former years ; a;d their conclusion was that jf just.such an occasion had occurred in Lillingtou twenty or twenty-five years ago with the great throng ol five thousand people coming from every part ol the couuty and with saloons open as they were then, thers would have bsen dozens of fights, certainly blood-shed and very probably a homic.da or two. In those days of twentv-five years ago sometimes a man scarcely knew when he was safe in the midst of the uproar, the confusion, and the violent disorder that prevailed as a re sult of whiskey iu the open saloous. No one who made the observations and contrasted conditions as we have described them can fail to see the triumphs ot prohibition in Harnetf. A more orderly crowd of people could not be round anywhere than met in Lillington last Thursday ; and if the time should ever come when effort will be made by any one to reopen saloons or in any other way make possible the sale of whiskey in Harnett county, we trust that the object lesson which was impressed on all at Lil lington on Thursday, August 3, 1905, will be a sufficient argument to shut out the traffic from the county for all time. tut To any one who knew Harnett county a quarter of a century ago, it was easy to" observe at the great celelebratiou in LUiingtoa last week the effect and power as a whole, and as one The Power of Educa tion in Harnett. high ; but they have been somewhat slow to appreciate the worth and power of education. But during the past ten or fifteen years the people bave become convinced that there is an uplifting power in education which can be found nowhere else, and they are giving thought and energy to it accordingly. Along with the quickened interest in education have come the moral awakening against the liquor traffic, the spirit of enterprise and the desire and purpose for general development. Railroads are being con structed through the hitherto undisturbed forests, and the screech of the locomotive tells of the coming of greater things. The majejtic Cape Fear river which in former times was often with difficulty crossed on a flat or bateau, is now spanned by magnificient bridges, and instead of spending an hour in calling up the ferryman and crossing the river, as was the case twenty-five years ago, one sweeps across the great stream now in a minute. All these developments and improvements, together with the bright and brightening prospects for the future, are in a great measure the result of a a quickened and more general interest in education. Harnett county owes more to Buie's Creek Academy tor this new interest in education than to any othet influence. Rev J. A. Campbell, the untiring principal ot that school, has spent more than fifteen years of his life in building up that in stitution, which equals any institution ot the kind and outclasses most ol them. The people of the county will never know what he has accom plished, and the sweep and power of his influence will never be measured. The great school with its great influence in the county and even far beyond the county limits, is a great monument alreadv erected to his work. While perhaps many of Harnett's sons have gone beyond her borders and have done well, he has remained at home and hns outstripped them all. And so Harnett county owes much of its present progress, and much for the bright outlook for the future to the strong revival ol education among the people Ad whatever" encouragement may be given to other things, let the people of good old Harnett remember that education is the one poten tial influence which is to blaze the way for greater things, and as they start out from the half century mile post In their history let their motto be Excelsior-higher in everything, and especially in education. HOW CONSUMPTIONBEGINS. Consumption always begins with a cough thai lingers. A cough that hangs on and will not yUld to the usual treatment,-may not mean con- ft en it does mean sumption uu - this dead destroyer has gamed a looting- Rydale's Cough Elixir is very successful m checking the progress of throat and lung diseases. Even con sumption, yields to its powerful in fluence, if its use is beKun before the disease is too deep seated. This modern scientific remedy kills the germs that cause consumption. " Loves the cauBe and helps nature rebuild the broken down tissue. u cf.iibbor a cough, try Ry- V. , u wi.vir it will not disap- : . ..'Mi E. T. Whitehead & Co. PASSING EVENTS. county at Lillington. And the first observation ve make is concerning the changed condition in Harnett county under prohibition against the of education. Ihe people of Harnett, have all the while been noble hearted, well said, the common level has been A WARNING TO MOTHERS. Too much care cannot be used with small children during the hot weather of the summer months to guard against bowel troubles. As a rule it is only necessary to give the child a dose of castor oil to correct any disorder of the bowels Do not use any substitute, but give the old-fashicned castor oil, oa that it is fresh, as rancid oil nauseates and has a tendency to gripe, If this does not check the bowels give Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and then a dose of the disease may be checked in its lncipiency and all dan A.A Tim rnator oil anl this gur auiu5u - remedy should be procured at once and kept ready lor instant use as soon as the first indication of any bowel trouble appears, mis is me must suc cessful treatment known and may be relied upon with implicit confadencu of cholera infantum. For even sale by all druggists. SLUMP IN MEDAL MARKET. It Is Stated That English Decorations Are Now Being Sold at Cut Bate Prices. All markets are liable to fluctuation, and that for war medals is just now experiencing a violent swing back of back of the pendulum. That these sou venirs will eventually recover their former values scarcely admits of doubt, says the Kansas City Journal. For one thing, they grow older and historically more important. For another, there is always the possibility that a drop in prices may induce a fresh lot of collect ors to enter the arena. For the mo ment, however, the market is some what upset by the death of a great col lector, who spent freely. Dealers with an eye to the main chance bought con siderable quantities of medals, and for a time turned them over again at a good margin of profit. Now they find a slackened demand," and themselves the holders of goods on which they cannot realize anything like the prices at which they acquired them. There is nothing for it, apparently, hut patience. Unique examples are probably quite worth their money to-day, but they must possess exceptional associations. Of this type are the bugle and-four medals of Trumpet Major Juy, who sounded the charge at Balaklava. They were sold in 189 for 781. As much as 1,081 has been given for the pen insular gold cross, but that was prob ably exceptional, and 550 is a later figure. When Nelson won the battle of the Nile, Alexander Davidson was so annoyed that no medal was presented to England's naval hero that he had one struck on his own account, In gold, silver, bronze and pewter. The gold specimen which he gave to Nelson was sold three years ago at the King street rooms and brought 180. For the Vic torian cross the highest price obtained at the same mart was 100 guineas. This was given to a member of the Shannon naval brigade, and is doubtless more valuable on account of the exceptional character of the act of gallantry which is recorded. The trophy, it is interest ing to record, was once pawned for five shillings. To-day a Victorian cross is worth from 40 to 50. South African war medals have been dumped on the market. When they were first issued they were worth 5 at auction. Now a medal with six bars can be got for ten shillings. Crimean medals with four bars are to-day SO per cent, cheaper than they were five years ago. The highest price paid' for a private soldier's Peninsular medal was for one with 13 bars. This brought 50 guineas, and afterward "escaped" in the post?'' Old Indian medals are high ly esteemed, and an officer's, worth in trinsically something like half a crown, has been known to fetch C6. The fall at the present time, as has been sug gested, is among the more mediocre class of decorations. Collectors of med als are numbered by the hundreds, and, therefore, there Is a level of values be yond which descent is practically im possible. Perhaps the kindest way of putting the present position is to say that there has been a pause in the up ward movement, and a sagging which was inevitable, pending the entry of some new Richmond into the field. STRANGER TO THE FLAG. Backwoodsman of Alabama Who Had Never Seen the National Emblem. A man was discovered in Coosa coun ty, Ala., last winter who had never seen the American flag. What is more, he had not the least perception of what it meant and was much astonished when this was explained to him. The incident happened in the longleaf pine country in which the Kaul lumber company is operating, near the little backwoods town of Juniata. A party of the government foresters was encamped In the woods beside the road. A large flag tied to a saping pine announced the site as a government camp. One evening a little old man came down the road driving a yoke of steers, and stopped to inquire whether the nartv would like to buv some pork. He got out of his cart, sat down on a stump and after a moment's conversation, his eye caught sight of the flag on the sap ling. He looked at it in a puzzled way then asked wtfat it was. The men thought at first that he was joking, but it was soon apparent the question was in good faith. "That's the American flag, man Haven't you ever seen the flag before?' No, he had never seen a flag of any kind before. He had heard there were such things, and once he had seen a pc- ture of a flag on a poster, but that was a long time ago, and he had almost for gotten about it. He had lived in the woods all his life, and had never been more than 13 miles from home. He wanted to know what the flag meant, and listened in silence when this was exoained to him. He did not know how to read or write, and had never heard that the Fourth of July was any differ ent from any other day. Collier Weekly. Wax Figure Surgeon. A Minneapolis woman, Mrs. Zimmer man, is surgeon in chief to many of the wax figures in that city, s&ne tnorougn ly understands the construction of these banner Inhabitants ot tne snow win rinws and when any of them rneet with accidents or receive scars or dis figurements of any kind, Mrs. Zimmer man can put them to rights again, mak ine a comfortable living out of their misfortunes. Skill of Heber's Wife. Jael had just driven the. nail Sisera. '- into "And I didn't hit my thumb once," she boasted. Herein we see the true reason why the Incident became history. N. Y. Sun. EXodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what you eat, REAL "SMOOTH ARTICLE.' Neat Little Scheme That Secured Some of a Smart Hotel Han's Money. A countryman whose general appear ance branded him as of the wayback type stepped into a State street hotel at 9:15 o'clock Saturday morning, and go ing up to the proprietor, who was at the desk, asked if a man named Charley Mc Carthy boarded there. The hotel keeper scanned the list of regular boarders and replied in the neg ative, relates the Hartford (Conn.) Courant. "That's funny," remarked the coun tryman, a half-frightened expression coming into his face, "the man I'm talk ing about told me he had boarded here for years." "I guess he was 'stringing yeu," re marked the proprietor, "for I don't know anyone who has boarded here for any lengt h of time." The stranger then told the following storyr "I live out near Willimantic, and I met this fellow, who said he was out buying cattle for the Hartford markets. He had bought quite a lot and wanted to buy two or three more, and he wanted to borrow $100. He had an hon tst face, and I let him have the money. He promised to meet me here at ten o'clock." "Well, I guess- you had better give up hopes of seeing McCarthy. In all prob ability he was a crook," said the hotel man. Then an argument ensued, the stran ger reiterating his ability to read an honest face and the hotel man insisting on the probability of McCarthy being a crook. The upshot of it all was that a bet of $100 was made on the appearance of McCarthy. . The money was staked about ten min utes of ten o'clock, and two hiinutes be fore the hour a man rushed in, greeted the countryman cordially and handed im $100, thanking him for the loan. "Well," said the countryman, "Iguess win. I thought I could read human na ture." The hotel man realized that he had been trapped, but he handed the money over to the winner with this injunction: You're slick, but just get out of here quick as you can, or I'll break every bone in your bodies." HER HUNGRY CHILDREN. Grave Constitutional Taints and Dis orders Prevalent in the Great City of Glasgow. "In Glasgow recently," writes Dr. An drew Wilson, according to a London pa per, buu cnuciren irom iour sfitcun schools were examined. Of Ihese, 19 per cent, suffered from diseased glands, mostly of a tubercular character, and therefore indicating a grave constitu tional taint. Four per cent, showed defi nite lung troubles, and heart disease pre vailed in five per cent, of those exam ined. The throat and nose suffered.to the extent of 61 per cent, of the children. and skin troubles were reckoned at near ly nine per cent. The deformed chest, which is the result of poor bone nourish ment, was found in 10 per cent. Glasgow has always had a reputation for the pre valence of rickets and allied bone disor ders. With regard to defective ears, the proportion was 27 per cent. "Now these records can, of course, be paralleled in most other big centers of population. We may legitimately as sume that to-day a terrible amount of physical deficiency prevails among chil dren and social reformers are naturally inquiring regarding the means to be adopted by way of relief, cure and pre vention of such crying evils. One phase of the remedy is undoubtedly found in the question of feeding and clothing. The Poor Children's Dinner Table soci ety in Glasgow gives to about 12,000 chil dren one meal daily during the winter months, and other agencies on a smaller scale supplement this work. "It is all philanthropic, all admirable, but it only touches the fringe of the case, and every year requires a repetition of the charity. We get 'no forrarder in the matter, and when we read of children whose midday hunger is appeased by a bowl of tea (which is not a food), un sweetened and destitute of milk, taken with bread without butter, we may well cease to wonder that child life goes to the wall in this terrible struggle for ex istence." O'Brien and Obliterated. Congressman George D. McCreary, of Philadelphia, tells a story of something that happened to him while he was trav eling In Ireland. An Irishman came down a hill driving a cart, the side of which had been lettered with the word "O'Brien." The letters, however, had been displaced, and the visitor, seeing this, said to the driver jestingly: "What is your name?" "O'Brien is my name," was the ready response. "Ah," replied the other, "is that so There is nothing to show it." "Yes," was the reply, "it's on my cart." "It might have been," answered the other, "but it's obliterated now." "It isn't Obliterated," rejoined the in dignant Irishman, "it's O'Brien." "Well, it was O'Brien," answered the other, "but it's Obliterated now." And they parted without settling the controversy. Baltimore Herald. What We Owe the Shark. The smiling shark may eat a man now and then though scientists doubt it but if he does, man gets even. He makes tinned soup and jelly of the smiling shark's fins, extracts fine ma chinery oil from his liver, makes hand some leather of his skin, walking sticks from his backbone and many useful ar ticles from his jawbones and teeth. Do you wonder that the shark takes a nip at a man's leg now and then? Duluth News-Tribune. DeWitt's KS9 Salvo For Pilesi Burns. Sores- Packed In. As illustrating the way the people i live in the "alien" districts of Lon don's Easi end, a member of parlia ment told this as a postman's common experience: "He knocks at the door with the first delivery; a head is put out of the first floor window and the question is asked, Ts that letter for So-and-So?' .'Yes,' replies the post man. 'Well,' says the lodger, 'please leave it on the window sill; 1 can't get down until the people who are sleep ing in the passageway their beds.'" have moved Eat the Octopus. In southen Italy the octopus is very largely used as an article of food. Its long tentacles are cut transversely, so that when served at table they have the appearance of rings. The fish, when taken by the day, are lured from the crevices of the rocks by a piece of red flannel, and they are then speared with a trident. At night an iron cradle with a bright flame of resinous wood is fixed at the bow of the boat. This attracts the fish and leads it to its doom. . The Man Who Bises Early. Heaven may forgive the man who rises at five, summer and winter, si ring and fall; we never can. The early riser is not a criminal, simply because tne law does not designate his offense as a crime. But it is admitted that the law has its de fects. Nothing can approach the look of superiority on the face of the early riser. He has found the only road to health or wealth. The books he has read before breakfast would, if collected in a heap, make the congressional library look small. Washington Post. Smallest Newspaper. Recently the smallest newspaper in the "World has made its appearance in Chicago. It is called the Two-Cent Stamp, and is devoted to the interests of post office employes. It is printed on the back of a postal card, and has all the departments of a modern news paper. Most of the material is written In a humorous vein. Formosan Bank Notes. The gold bank notes oi the Japanese Formosan bank are very,popular in the Island. Many people there, in order to get the notes in exchange for their gold and silver, actually pay a premium. The money shaving based on the for mer almost worthless currency of Mor mosa is put out of business. Trees in Iceland. Iceland seems tobe hardly as destitute Df irstf-. r-r.ic suppose., an old idva be ing Ihnt it possesses only a singletree. An investigation shows that the island really contains woods having various trees of considerable size, and that the climate is not unfavorable to tree growth. The Automobile Fancy. The automobile fancy is the most ex pensive and progressive of any in the world. It is calculated that there are 50,000 horseless machines now in tne United States. The auto has surpassed running horses, locomotives and even ice boats. Bridgeton (N. J.) Pioneer. She Saw Stars. Miss Henrietta S. Leavitt, the young Radcliffe graduate who has startled the world of science by discovering more than 400 variable stars, must be possessed naturally of the gift which enables some girls to find four-leafed clovers. Boston Transcript. Only the Lord Mayor. Only one man in the city of London outside the Tower possesses the pass word which enables him to answer the challenge of the sentries at any time. It is the lord mayor, and the password is given to him by authority of the king. Sufficient Reason. Mrs. Strap Charlie, what makes you swear so dreadfully while you are shav ing? Mr. Strap I suppose, my dear, it is because of the old nick in the razor. N. Y. Times. Not the Beal Thing. A step-mother may not fall short in any of her duties, but she falls short when it comes to enthusiasm. There is no substitute in the world for a moth er's enthusiasm. Atchison Globe. But, O, How They Abuse Them! The discovery that cooks are better paid than school teachers in New York is not surprising. Most men care more for their stomachs than they do for their brains. N. Y. American. The Only Way. "If you want a thing well done " began the Quotation Fiend. "Tell the waiter you want it rare." finished the restaurant victim Cleve land Leader. Be Sure You're Right. A Paris doctor now insists that there Is no danger in kissing. It is just as dangerous as ever to kiss the wrong woman. N. Y. American. Not Usual. Chili is reported to be prospering in trade. This is quite a revolution in South America. Baltimore American. British Marksmen. British soldiers are, speaking gener ally, better marksmen than either French or German. Fertile Soil. . An explorer states that almost every thing planted would grow in Uganda. True Friend. A true friend fe a man is a friend tp all friends. Wycherley. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure JUoests what you e- ) if- " Mh- ! Correct Dress li t ie Kigh-?r;it;:e taos'ing irdrccjccii by M r.. p- :- ..r re.-,,:.,,,-! n t r -.Odd ryv, h: A'l Gartnefti M-.Js SirfcUy to Your rv!c-.vur2 6l rfclf-rat? piirM. 500 :. I 'S of fnrrign crsd c! :,.x.-.tic L.briw fiu v.!:idito choree. Ark y-. dun'er to h r . t rc;iciS!itBO, wrt:. '.' yra c ir lir.c, or if ; izr rsriiciilus. HAYS ea CO. c z n c IUDDiniC & HOOKKli, MASt'HtTi'RHiis' A.kx;s, sr .rr.wi) sv.ru, - n c. 01R CHOCOLATE SODA IS MADE VVlTHea CHOCOLATE. THE SAME AS USED AT HIE rorSTAIXS OF THEIR TSVENTYONE SEr'JL STKES ASS bSiHVN TSEtV65!5 CM FSSilS !;m:i!lS5t F-S E. T. Whitehc.nl & Company Sale Agents Scotland Xcfk. X. C. PERSONALLY CON!' TO TIIIC PACIFI'J iOAT VIA SEABOARD AIR LINE BAILEY, The Se.ibo.iiu iv-ti n i' ly co.s '.iv-.f'-f i,ur Mt(?j to points in C dorado. a pnrwi i - ( t ti y.H ."n":. I YeiloAf.no N'aliouai r.i.-',:, l,u Fr.ineisso, t!ia L;., is sition at INirihrid, Ai; S.r.i . 1 fV...i. 1",.., ')r? , fill o'.Iiar P'rfuta ol interest o-i tin IVu-i!-...' C i.!t, to leave about A'un' 1-t t Nth, ex isfc dale being decided :J:-r. ",hr ton. id trip U only $82 ') ai.d i mSc will l,o via Atlanta. IJinniii''L:tir., Mcmp-il.--, St.LoufM, Ka'aa Oily. Dsnvt r, Cd r.ido Spring, Salt L'ike Ciiy, '-f fl zelcs, San Fmnci -c, Ti: ?v.a- '. i roo'.o o Portland, .)il!ievii to M. Paul, thene-3 to Chica.-to '-.d irtir.i vu 8t, Lnui.J. Thr.inh Pitllm.ni c: -.viil 1i- ur- party, winch will he );-i -:i tiiy con ducted by i:.''.v. WiliiuM soul wife of Davidson, X. C, win smc- fully handle 1 the !.u;;e party lat A i siust. Itinerary of thw trip " v prepared which will ln'l d'.,,,,l in to the rate, stop-overs v:4 rtt- s and points of intrret. It will l i one .if ibe most complete trip-i of its ki'.d ever arranged from tliH S'. no p.nd nt very sniill co.t. T li ;-e who j i i tbo party will be nhown every i t : out i n over Ibe entire trip which v.-Ml eoi.inne between four and live viw-ks. Write for lnol.-let and nib-m itio-i to Rev. Willi irn Black, Davidson, N. C, or add i oh Ciias. H. (Jattis, T. I'. A , KakkU, N. O. Special Rates VIA 22 A 13 O A R D. s The KciiboiU'1 announces that they will sell i educed r.ate round tiip tickets to the following points account sj tciil -oscj'sions : K'.:hmon i, Va Farmers National Confess, Sept. Mou'e'iKle, Teun. Mrmtcn Hiiilo TrJ-.iiiS School, July il-Aug. 1.".. Kooxville, Tenn. Summer School, Jure 20-July Si NaUiville, Tei.n. l'eabody f utr.rr.er School, Vanderbilt Biblical Iostitu'.e, Juno ll-Augo.-t d. Monteafcle, Tenn. V.'i man's Con gress, Aug. 1-1. "5. Xlonteagle, Tenn. Mwute.igle S. ti. Institute, July 1-Aiig. o Athens Ca. Summer School, Juuo 27-July 2S. Baltimore, Md. United Society Christian Endeavor, I nt-jrnatiusjHl Con vention, July 5-10. Ashevllle, N. C Col Ten i;ce Y..urg People's Mitsioiii ry Asoc;.n:on, June 2.VJul-2. n;.vi(i.m College. N. C Piedmont Summer Kcho .Lil.v. 11 ,o. Philadelphia, I'.t l'a" i mcI s' Mtii- Unlit! d SoveiM.'M i..t.d L d'C I O.O. f.. wept. i;-2:; Ch'irloue.-viilis V i Virginia Sum mer School of .Nif.ih.-irf. .1 " 27- ; Kate fr:.m l'a'rg : -SG0 For Inn her Inf.amaf :;!. ::.!'!--. CHAs. i; :a i ! i -. i. i' A l-:!.H;:i, X C. C I- ft w e e tp w w w ' i Hi .t i ii -it A FOLEYSHOIIEMAR 1 "v-
The Commonwealth (Scotland Neck, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 10, 1905, edition 1
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